Spanish Constitutional Court annuls Catalan independence declaration

APD NEWS

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The members of the Spanish Constitutional Court on Wednesday voted unanimously to definitively annul the unilateral declaration of independence for Catalonia which was approved by Catalan Parliament on Oct. 27.

The Constitutional Court also voted to suspend the transition law for the construction of a Catalan republic.

Both the declaration of independence and the transition law had previously been temporarily suspended by the court while it studied an appeal against them by the Spanish government of Mariano Rajoy.

Speaking in the Spanish Congress on Wednesday, Prime Minister Rajoy made an appeal for a "massive turnout" in the elections for Catalan Parliament, which he called for Dec. 21 after applying Article 155 of the Spanish Constitution to suspend Catalan autonomy and sack the former regional government of Carles Puigdemont hours after the Oct. 27 independence declaration.

Meanwhile, a strike in Catalonia against the imprisonment of eight members of the former government on charges of rebellion, sedition, and misuse of funds, has obtained only a limited following in the region.

Despite the patchy support, protestors have caused major delays on both roads and rail lines, with traffic backups of up to 15 km on some major roads in the region. Demonstrators also blocked the line of the high-speed AVE train service in Gerona and caused delays on many local and regional trains.

(ASIA PACIFIC DAILY)